India celebrates 5th Intl Yoga Day
RANCHI, India - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi led the way on Friday on International Yoga Day, this year with the theme of stopping climate change.
Yoga Day, observed mostly in India but also worldwide on the Northern Hemisphere's longest day, was Modi's idea. It was adopted unanimously by the UN General Assembly in 2014 and first took place in 2015.
Modi performed sun salutations and other flexible feats in a mass early-morning session with an estimated 30,000 other devotees that was livestreamed on the mediasavvy premier's social media account feed to his 48 million followers.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi performs yoga on International Yoga Day in Ranchi, India, on Friday. Rajesh Kumar / Reuters |
Elsewhere in India, armed forces personnel laid out their yoga mats on the deck of the aircraft carrier INS Viraat anchored in Mumbai while at India Gate, a Delhi landmark, Defense Minister Rajnath Singh led the way.
Foreign diplomats in New Delhi also got in the act, such as the staff of the French and German embassies.
Members of India's National Cadet Corps took part in a mass yoga session at the Bison Polo Grounds in Hyderabad while roughly 70,000 people took over the racecourse in Mysore in the south.
'Panacea' for stress
Modi this year took to business networking website LinkedIn to extol yoga as a "panacea" for stress and even hate.
"In a world where ideologies of hate can potentially divide brother from brother, Yoga stands as a unifying force," Modi wrote.
"In a time where health ailments, especially stress-related ailments are rising, Yoga is giving relief and joy."
The theme of this yoga day, the fifth, is "climate action" and Modi said yoga can "foster oneness... with all the flora and fauna with whom we share our beautiful planet".
In recent days, Modi, 68, fresh from a landslide election victory, has also posted videos to social media featuring an animated version of himself performing different yoga postures.
Yoga is an ancient physical, mental and spiritual practice originating in India. The word derives from Sanskrit and means to join or to unite, symbolizing the union of body and consciousness, said the UN's official Yoga Day webpage.
It has boomed in recent decades, with millions - perhaps up to 300 million - practicing it regularly, although in the West it is often more of a physical than a spiritual activity.
Among the more unusual forms that have sprung up are "hoga" (yoga on a horse), "noga" (nude yoga), "doga" (yoga with a dog) - and Harry Potter yoga complete with a "Downward Dumbledore".
Agence France-Presse
(China Daily 06/22/2019 page7)